Time lapse: Why I shoot lights at night Posted on 3 April 2013 Tags:Norway, timelapse What comes first, the music or the picture? I think it can be either, or both. Films get scored, music videos get shot. But sometimes, I think, a visual idea is born with the soundtrack already well-stitched into the creators mind. My obsession with finding cool time lapse photography (see them all here) has led me to this rather magical time-lapse shot in the cold north of Norway, and I’m trying to figure out which came first. Toby Lockerbie spent 16 day days in Norway hiking, walking, falling, trying, failing and more often than not just waiting … waiting for clear skies so that he could shoot the Aurora Borealis. He spent his days sleeping and his nights awake, shooting everything else besides what he went there for. He went slightly mad. Eventually he got the shot but what he finally came away with was this story. It’s edited to Grieg’s In the Hall of the Mountain King which conveys a kind of madness that makes you think that he had the track on loop in his brain the entire time he was up there. It’s an ohrwurm and you’ll be humming it for the rest of the day. Why I shoot lights at night Why I shoot Lights at night from TobyLoc on Vimeo. Related Posts Kruger captured 31 May 2023 His ability to capture animals in moments when their personalities are in full flight makes Armand... read more Radical Earthling: Joseph “Nabster” Chege 25 May 2023 Using his art to try to "inoculate" people with a desire to "unplug, slow down... read more Eye of the beholder 24 May 2023 Juho Karhu often shows intimate close-ups of seldom-seen creatures and provides a fascinating window into... read more PREV ARTICLE NEXT ARTICLE
Kruger captured 31 May 2023 His ability to capture animals in moments when their personalities are in full flight makes Armand... read more
Radical Earthling: Joseph “Nabster” Chege 25 May 2023 Using his art to try to "inoculate" people with a desire to "unplug, slow down... read more
Eye of the beholder 24 May 2023 Juho Karhu often shows intimate close-ups of seldom-seen creatures and provides a fascinating window into... read more